Some people contended that the reason Mademoiselle Reisz always chose

apartments up under the roof was to discourage the approach of beggars,

peddlars and callers. There were plenty of windows in her little front

room. They were for the most part dingy, but as they were nearly always

open it did not make so much difference. They often admitted into the

room a good deal of smoke and soot; but at the same time all the light

and air that there was came through them. From her windows could be seen

the crescent of the river, the masts of ships and the big chimneys of

the Mississippi steamers. A magnificent piano crowded the apartment.

In the next room she slept, and in the third and last she harbored a

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gasoline stove on which she cooked her meals when disinclined to descend

to the neighboring restaurant. It was there also that she ate, keeping

her belongings in a rare old buffet, dingy and battered from a hundred

years of use.

When Edna knocked at Mademoiselle Reisz's front room door and entered,

she discovered that person standing beside the window, engaged in

mending or patching an old prunella gaiter. The little musician laughed

all over when she saw Edna. Her laugh consisted of a contortion of the

face and all the muscles of the body. She seemed strikingly homely,

standing there in the afternoon light. She still wore the shabby lace

and the artificial bunch of violets on the side of her head.

"So you remembered me at last," said Mademoiselle. "I had said to

myself, 'Ah, bah! she will never come.'"

"Did you want me to come?" asked Edna with a smile.

"I had not thought much about it," answered Mademoiselle. The two had

seated themselves on a little bumpy sofa which stood against the wall.

"I am glad, however, that you came. I have the water boiling back there,

and was just about to make some coffee. You will drink a cup with

me. And how is la belle dame? Always handsome! always healthy! always

contented!" She took Edna's hand between her strong wiry fingers,

holding it loosely without warmth, and executing a sort of double theme

upon the back and palm.

"Yes," she went on; "I sometimes thought: 'She will never come. She

promised as those women in society always do, without meaning it.

She will not come.' For I really don't believe you like me, Mrs.

Pontellier."

"I don't know whether I like you or not," replied Edna, gazing down at

the little woman with a quizzical look.

The candor of Mrs. Pontellier's admission greatly pleased Mademoiselle

Reisz. She expressed her gratification by repairing forthwith to the

region of the gasoline stove and rewarding her guest with the promised

cup of coffee. The coffee and the biscuit accompanying it proved very

acceptable to Edna, who had declined refreshment at Madame Lebrun's and

was now beginning to feel hungry. Mademoiselle set the tray which she

brought in upon a small table near at hand, and seated herself once

again on the lumpy sofa.




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